A clarification: The standard term for what I called a "Strong Nash" is actually "Strict Nash". "Strong Nash" means something else, but it's only relevant in more complicated situations, so I hope it doesn't cause confusion here. But strictly speaking, I should have used "Strict" in this video!
@NotKingOfBees6 ай бұрын
Nah bro first like, and reply is crazy
@TransnestianLily6 ай бұрын
Nah bro third like, and second reply is crazy
@KaratekidDom1236 ай бұрын
5 like and 3rd reply
@GoldenmakerObjectCosmos6 ай бұрын
ba dum tsss
@johnchessant30126 ай бұрын
6 like and 5th reply
@jacktem111 ай бұрын
I think I prefer the narrative that 1 mango lets the blob survive, and additional allow them to reproduce, because it’s so tragic that the blobs die every day
@aguyontheinternet843611 ай бұрын
blobs will starve no matter what you do
@volodyadykun649011 ай бұрын
All things must pass
@thekingoffailure996711 ай бұрын
This is an accurate simulation of real world populations. Google how many humans die every day lol
@andresmartinezramos751311 ай бұрын
The way it's presented in the video better extends when changing the simulation to allow for mutations. Because both offspring can mutate, while if it's a parent child relation only one can mutate.
@SgtSupaman11 ай бұрын
@@andresmartinezramos7513 , it could just as easily be said that the one that survived chose to change strategies. Both blobs can still have the same odds of mutating.
@Lgapwookie11 ай бұрын
One thing I am interested in is what would happen if the team blobs learned to find each other and avoid the solos letting them fight each other
@BrianHoschouer11 ай бұрын
I was thinking it would be interesting if they made siblings more likely to go together to the tree.
@nyphron310911 ай бұрын
Correlated interaction! One of my favorite parts of evolutionary game theory. If team try to find team, and solo try to find solo (or don't care who they find), then cooperation will evolve so long as the team blobs find each other enough. That point is determined by Hamilton's Rule, and is actually a pretty neat piece of math. It was initially devised to deal with how altruism applies, but because of some game theory shenannigans, it applies here too. On the other hand, if team try to find team, and solo also try to find team (they do better against team than solo blobs), then it's mathematically like there's no correlated interaction at all. Hope that helped!
@amv24011 ай бұрын
@@nyphron3109❤️🙏
@The-Milky-Way--they-it11 ай бұрын
omg that’d be so cool! the biggest thing I was left wondering, since I’ve also watched the altruism video, is what would happen if the teamwork blobs gave birth to, or were more likely to give birth to, more teamwork blobs. since in the end they all end up with more food, it would mean they’d have a higher population, right?
@Tiziotozio01-cz1nd6 ай бұрын
@@nyphron3109with evolve do you mean take over? I mean everything are still evolving all the time.
@gamb11 ай бұрын
fun fact: the Nash Equilibrium was made by John Nash, who was actually an extremely schizophrenic mathematician and the case study of how he dealt with it is taught in most introductory clinical psychology courses. He even has a movie about him that is great (albeit inaccurate).
@nerdlord31411 ай бұрын
I just watched that movie yesterday
@histhoryk264811 ай бұрын
That's good, I don't need to deal with schizophrenia I just need to do some math
@TheBaxes11 ай бұрын
@@histhoryk2648it's a 2x1 deal
@xtxownage11 ай бұрын
"What if *nobody* goes for the blonde girl?"
@ArchitectGG11 ай бұрын
@@LeZylox Hey look, we found THAT guy.
@smallw200311 ай бұрын
How did this guy come up with such a perfect creature, the b l o b
@mellymellymellymelly11 ай бұрын
Math
@Cannotoad120111 ай бұрын
F
@elchuchooofin380711 ай бұрын
And the perfect house: r o c k
@EEEEEEEE11 ай бұрын
E
@Cannotoad120111 ай бұрын
@@EEEEEEEE E
@classkid32111 ай бұрын
These concepts are very much over my head but I appreciate you putting them into blob form and explaining them
@genius3141511 ай бұрын
We have endless patience with you Mr. Primer, and it always pays off.
@Rar5440-d3z4 ай бұрын
I don't
@DannySullivanMusic11 ай бұрын
Whenever Primer uploads I drop my newborn child and watch
@ic1cl311 ай бұрын
And when the world needed him most He returned
@emilvinod11 ай бұрын
Really cool
@elchuchooofin380711 ай бұрын
Weird that today i was thinking "man i wanna watch sum primer"
@SansULB2911 ай бұрын
*Y E S*
@gamingwithpapaandfriends5 ай бұрын
and then he left again
@atypicalprogrammer577711 ай бұрын
It would be interesting if the Blobs could only visit trees near their "home". (Edit I did that myself, see the bottom of the comment) I imagine a start with 50% solos with 2 Nash Equilibrii would result in a mix of "friendly neighbourhoods" where cooperation dominates and "battlefields" where fighting dominates. Edit: I made a simulation, with a grid of 32 by 32 worlds, each with 4 trees, and enough houses for 64 blobs. I used the same rules about blobs going to get food from trees and reproducing as in the video. Except each of my blobs can freely visit trees in their own world, and the 4 nearby worlds, and the blob's children can choose to move to a nearby world. I started with 1 friendly and 1 solo blob at far-apart worlds and looked at 256 turns. With the setup from 3:23 two "nations" formed, but (as some people below predicted before I tested it) the friendly nation eventually -- after almost all 256 turns -- was able to convert the entire world to its peaceful ways, by force. The friendly nation was able to sustain a much larger population, so enough friendly blobs "immigrated" to the unfriendly neighbourhood each turn, that they were able to cooperate with each other to get more resources than the "locals". Edit: My C++ code is on Github dot com slash nikolajRoager slash blobsOnLattice (I am apparently not allowed to include a link in a comment) The code is not tested on windows, and normal warnings about running random code from the internet apply.
@EEEEEEEE11 ай бұрын
E
@cheshire111 ай бұрын
in that scenario cooperation would dominate, because the overall rewards among cooperators are so much higher than between fighters.
@Lotschi11 ай бұрын
@@cheshire1right! We might get the neighbourhoods but the cooperative ones would slowly extend.
@edgytoucan344411 ай бұрын
friendly neighborhoods contain large eyeless birds and reluctant cable guys
@guilherme83211 ай бұрын
Yes, but I think that'd be just like each different world that he created. In a way, he already did a each neighbourhood thing
@lester56778 ай бұрын
Nice videos man
@qNoobj11 ай бұрын
I think we should all agree to appreciate how he uploads 3 times a year
@DR.Afterthought11 ай бұрын
Next we are going to simulate the evolution of evolution
@sriramkumaran231011 ай бұрын
Only belief in christ
@SamuraiPipotchi11 ай бұрын
Pretty sure he's already done that
@oldvlognewtricks11 ай бұрын
@@sriramkumaran2310Nah - we’re clever enough not to need fairytales to explain this stuff.
@T-v2k11 ай бұрын
@@oldvlognewtricksyes we all think youre very intelligent, now r/atheism is down the hall to the left
@oldvlognewtricks11 ай бұрын
@@T-v2k Who needs to be an atheist to comprehend basic emergent behaviour?
@vivialanis952111 ай бұрын
Every time Primer uploads it feels like a life checkpoint
@--F0X-by-The-Moon--8 ай бұрын
Fr
@PrimerBlobs11 ай бұрын
I'm streaming now on Twitch. Come by to chat about the video or anything else! www.twitch.tv/justin_helps
I'd love to see a more complex simulation where, rather than the blobs dying after a single round of gathering, they instead do multiple rounds first and remember who the solo blobs are. A few other ideas to make it more interesting are: -Sharing with blobs who got nothing. -Solo blobs that will try to steal from teamwork groups. -Blobs who change what they do depending on how other blobs treat them. -Larger groups who get less each, but can block solo blobs. -Smart blobs who wait to act selfishly. -Traitor blobs who work with each other, but are selfish against team and solo blobs.
@SansULB2911 ай бұрын
Hmm interesting... -this one kind of simulates charity. -this simulates stealing (obviously) -this is some level of emotion -this somewhat simulates tribalism/the idea that "we are stronger together" -basically simulates smarter stealers -this creates a new "faction" of blobs
@Bozebo11 ай бұрын
That's so difficult to build but it'd be fun. It's either get stuck implementing and experimenting with specifics; or you'd need to find a way to fractally have the game rules modify over time/generations and have ML decision making models for each blob as an agent and let the rest emerge "naturally" and then analyse what emerged to see if you incidentally created for example "traitor blobs who work with each other, but are selfish against team and solo blobs" and what they did.
@SansULB2911 ай бұрын
@@Bozebo ye..
@nyphron310911 ай бұрын
Evolutionary game theory has answers for all those questions! In order: - Altruism can evolve when the ratio of blobs who share is greater than (penalty for sharing / benefit for sharing). That's called Hamilton's Rule. - This wouldn't make that big of a difference mathematically, because it's basically already happening. - That's called Hawk-Dove-Retaliator, and is a super famous game in game theory. Basically, you try to be cooperative, but if your partner attacks/betrays you, you attack them back. It turns out that cooperating can evolve if there are enough retaliators in the population to keep the solos out. But if there aren't enough, the solos will invade. - This one actually isn't classic game theory, but would definitely be interesting. It's basically a more extreme form of teamwork. I expect it wouldn't change much, though. - This would be the opposite of the retaliator from before: they go to cooperate, but betray anyone who cooperates with them. They wouldn't do very good, because they'd kill each other off. - This would be pre-play signalling (or greenbeard effect), which is a known way for cooperation to evolve. Basically, we make signals at each other, and if we both get the signal, then we cooperate. The issue is if the other blobs can learn: then, I could make the signal at you, you'd try to cooperate, but I'd betray you. So how well pre-play signalling works depends heavily on the constraints of the simulation. Hope that helped! Everything there is Google-able, too.
@SansULB2911 ай бұрын
@@nyphron3109 I'm pretty new at evolutionary game theory and this topic is really interesting to me. Thanks for the explanation!
@TheMitchyevans11 ай бұрын
Cooperative strategies almost always work better in repeated interactions, especially when a tit-for-tat strategy is being utilized. It is interesting to see how these equilibria form even under these conditions.
@EEEEEEEE11 ай бұрын
E
@Mpkki11 ай бұрын
Y'know, it would be interesting to see a harder system where blobs survive if they have 1 food and reproduce for any excess and keep the memory of blobs they met and can communicate in their under-the-same-rock groups, so that tit-for-tat could actually be a thing. For example, a team blob could change its behavior (if beneficial) if it knows that the second blob is solo because this solo blob interacted with another team player from the same rock home the day before, or the other way around.
@belg4mit11 ай бұрын
The key is that evolution *is* repeated interaction. Whether the same individuals ineract, or their descendants, the impact is the same in a stateless situation (no memory of previous interaction to implement tit-for-tat)
@Dogo.R11 ай бұрын
Tit for tat definition: The best strategy is to assume cooperation at first. Then if they act one-sided in that interaction then in your next interact you strive to exactly* negate the extra benefit they received from acting one-sided instead of cooperatively. Then then next interaction you assume cooperation again. This strategy performs better then all other strategies invented as long as you can keep track of who you have interacted with previously and whether they acted cooperatively or one-sided that last time. And this same strategy can be observed in nature... though animals arnt dynamic like humans. They cant really switch strategy within the same livespan. Their behavior is formed due to evolution instead. Also worth mentioning that the above is based on perfect information. The optimal strategy has many more features and complexities when there is imperfect information but it still follows this core aim. The extra stuff is just trying to deal with signal error.
@Scrogan11 ай бұрын
Only if the situation isn’t designed to produce a prisoners’ dilemma. If you were an authoritarian regime and wanted to prevent your citizens from gaining power, you’d make it more beneficial for them to turn on one another than to cooperate. See East Germany and the USSR. I’d also watch out for lawmakers and lobbyists doing this in the current age in what we think are liberal democracies.
@StainlessHelena11 ай бұрын
Really interesting. I wonder what will happen if the blobs tried to find the right partner before shaking a tree. The blobs could have many more traits: -How long do they spend looking for a partner before just picking whoever? -How good are they at determining which traits their candidate has? -How well can blobs pretend to be another kind? -How many chances do they get before dying? Do they stick with an arrangement that was beneficial? Til death do them part?
@MortonArchery11 ай бұрын
I'd love to see the outcome of a fission/fusion species much like coyotes. Unlike wolves they don't require a pack, but can group up if needed. It apparently worked well for them as they were the only predator to be almost unaffected by the predator war.
@MartianSantas11 ай бұрын
What predator war are you talking about? I'd love to read about it
@MortonArchery11 ай бұрын
@@MartianSantas basically all of north american large predators. The books american serengeti and coyote America cover the subject quite well.
@scientificthesis11 ай бұрын
Which case would that count as in this video?
@MortonArchery11 ай бұрын
@@scientificthesis neither, it's a combo of the two. They would switch between the two when necessary
@minaashido51811 ай бұрын
@@MortonArcheryby predator war are you talking emu war style or world war style Basically is it animals vs humans or animals vs other animals?
@realspacepro11 ай бұрын
I DIDN'T CARE TO READ THE TITLE, THE MOMENT I RECOGNISED THE BLOBS I CLICKED
@darkheartplays0077 ай бұрын
ME TOO
@Coolguythatexist7 ай бұрын
ME TOO
@Gloggle7 ай бұрын
ME TOO
@banana36377Ай бұрын
Same🙃
@Buttercups-t4c21 күн бұрын
Same!!!
@MattTrevett11 ай бұрын
The timing with Veritasium's video is impeccable.
@I_shouldnt_be_here11 ай бұрын
Thanks for all the work you do!
@frankleahy22611 ай бұрын
An interesting simulation would be one of 2+ importing/exporting economies which trade currency for goods with each other, but neither/one/both can print money at varying rates.
@beaub15211 ай бұрын
Yes, economic simulations would be cool
@St3amPunk11 ай бұрын
YOUR BACK!!! I MISSED YOU AND YOUR SCIENCE!!!!!!!!!!! YES!
@literallyaflower11 ай бұрын
Hey primer, i’ve been following your videos for years and I love how as I grow older, I understand more about your videos! When I was younger I never really understood what you were saying, and just liked the blobs and the numbers, but now I can truly follow what you’re saying and I think that’s fascinating.
@enderkatze612911 ай бұрын
Now, Here's what i would find super interesting to simulate: Introducing blobs that weigh their chances. I.e. a (perhaps purple) blob that knows it's chances and chooses either fight or cooperation based on what would be Most advantageous in regards to what their opponent is
@akirachisaka999711 ай бұрын
I feel like my first thought when watching this video is, what is the team blobs retaliate? Like, if the team blob notices that the cooperator betrays them, they just suicide attack? Will this make it favor the team blobs more?
@jessehammer12311 ай бұрын
My name is Inigo Blobtoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die.
@Jellylamps11 ай бұрын
It sounds to me like this situation is one that would intensify whichever strategy has a greater population.
@conlon433211 ай бұрын
@@Jellylamps Yeah, if they meet they both die, which is worse for whichever there are less of, causing the outnumbered group to die out. Interested what would happen if they start out equal, though.
@skreppeknekker11 ай бұрын
This is why tit-for-tat is a better strategy, but it means the losing team blob needs to be able to remember the solo blob and/or pass this informs to other team blobs. This is why humans developed language: to gossip and share who in the group was trustworthy or not
@flameofthephoenix839511 ай бұрын
@@skreppeknekker Species is irrelevant, all animals are equally likely to gossip.
@teamcyeborg11 ай бұрын
I'd be curious how these simulations change if the blobs can somehow communicate or remember info, since the Prisoner's Dilemma was brought up. The best strategy in a single prisoner's dilemma is to go solo, but in a repeated situation where you can communicate you're better off teaming up with your opponent or - even better - playing Tit For Tat
@revimfadli466611 ай бұрын
Imagine putting neural networks in blobs, I wonder what strategies would emerge
@nyphron310911 ай бұрын
@@revimfadli4666 Not much. Neural networks suck at game theory when they're playing in pairs.
@revimfadli466611 ай бұрын
@@nyphron3109 wait really? How? What kind of network topology and size? Deterministic or stochastic policies?
@nyphron310911 ай бұрын
@@revimfadli4666 it doesn’t matter, which is the interesting part. The issue you have is that the neural networks lack context that living players in game theory intuitively have. I just wrote a paper on this, actually.
@revimfadli466611 ай бұрын
@@nyphron3109 interesting, what kind of context? What's the paper title? Can you make context-informed neural networks to fix that? Does that inability apply to evolutionary game theory (where agents don't even need decision making capabilities), or just classic game theory? Can this "intuition" or its analogue emerge in an evolutionary game ecosystem, just like gene-determined behaviour?
@MicroYeti11 ай бұрын
7:56 - in these ‘battle of the sexes’ equilibria (there are two distinct Nash equilibria where players benefit from doing the same thing as their opponent), the usual strategy players will go for is to randomly mix your strategies based on the expected output from mixing the strategies in such a way. That’s the third Nash equilibrium in the problem, since there are (almost) always an odd number of Nash equilibria. Alternatively, since the game is repeated in this case, the threat of reverting to the inferior Nash of solo solo would generally encourage rational players to always choose team team to maximise their long term utility gained. Impatient players, or players that prefer rewards now than rewards later, might be willing to switch to solo and then have the other player also play solo forever. Haven’t yet got onto the bit of the video about evolutionary theory, where you might cover this, but that’s the continuation from within standard game theory :)
@efjay318311 ай бұрын
07:40 The philosopher Thomas Hobbes referred to the nash equilibrium of both sides fighting the ”state of nature” and he argued that the most imortant aspect of a government, regardless of ideology or benevolence, is to ensure that the only nash equilibrium to exist for its people is to cooperate. He reviled the state of nature. They accomplish this through policing.
@KenesuEXE11 ай бұрын
12:16 i love the graph within a graph visuals Graphinception
@daniellaizekemoe196710 ай бұрын
4:47 Hypothesis: if the percentage of team blobs are higher than the percentage of solo blobs. The team blobs will prevail. This is because while the solo blobs are hurting eachother, the team blobs cooperate with aneanother. And if there ever is a team blob-solo blob interactioj of different species, the team blobs will just one-up eachother with the best possible out-comes while the solos win't benefit at all if they aren't the majority. Vice versa if the solo-blobs are the norm. In game theory, I believe this might be similar to the prisoner's dilemma. As it follows the same genral reward system ( well, besides the alternative option of one for them-selves).
@nicktohzyu11 ай бұрын
Would love to see an analysis where the blobs evolve not just on a binary team/solo strategy, but on mixed nash equilibria! Where they have a probability of either cooperating or defecting
@soulandre870211 ай бұрын
This is literally Kropotkin's Book "Mutual Aid: a Factor of Evolution", and I love it
@benLXIX11 ай бұрын
I think it would be interesting to incorporate honesty/dishonesty into the mix. A dishonest solo blob would approach the tree and tell the other one that they'll work together, but then starts going solo. An honest solo blob is up front and says they're going solo, so the other blob automatically goes solo as well. Maybe two dishonest blobs would get into a bigger fight and expens more energy?
@akfbqoabepajsoa6 ай бұрын
Would that also apply to team blobs?
@7amoody.buhazza11 ай бұрын
When the world needed Primer most, he came back.
@galacgacwatson310211 ай бұрын
I just noticed that sometimes the blobs blink one eye at a time. For example, the red blob at 5:55
@sharknemesis510911 ай бұрын
Always a good year when Primer posts.
@damseydiou11 ай бұрын
the blobs are truly more iconic than anything i can possibly think of.
@kiraoshiro615711 ай бұрын
idk the moon is pretty iconic.. oh wait that's just ya mum
@damseydiou11 ай бұрын
@@kiraoshiro615779 buried, 3 found
@gcarifo11 ай бұрын
Man I love your content! The way you do things seems so intuitive like it just makes sense the way you go about things and the results are always so interesting! I also love just how unique your type of videos like simulating natural selection or like social behavior through out human evolution it's something I never see! I really appreciate the hard work and dedication you have keep up the great work! been watching you since your natural selection video
@guywholovemaps159111 ай бұрын
You know it’s a great month when premiere uploads
@Indoseptic11 ай бұрын
it is a great day when Primer uploads
@chaosruby979211 ай бұрын
11:02 wait blobs have butts? i really should learn about the blob anatomy
@michaelkindt32884 ай бұрын
@3:43-.-They feel pretty evenly matched here. I don't imagine one's going to dominate. But I guess I would say if one becomes slightly more common by chance, then they'll be able to overtake the rest of the population. Because each strategy seems to be the most effective when it meets itself. Not that I took a little second to think about it, I suppose the team strategy has the advantage of spreading its numbers among themselves, meaning teams get a collective booth when they meet themselves, well solo only barely breaks even. So teams are probably going to win.
@cinnamonkittamon11 ай бұрын
Its interesting that, for the bottom left, middle, and top right ones, how it goes from quickly diverging away from the center, to having no preference, and then to going toward the center
@alexandermoldoveanu842411 ай бұрын
Noticed that as well, it's fascinating
@sirnate906511 ай бұрын
These videos are so good. I love the format or the pace - how you gradually introduce complexity.
@BlazeLycan11 ай бұрын
It is a good year when Primer uploads.
@ch-animatestudios11 ай бұрын
I love how you ask us to think critically while we watch. It’s really unique and I like trying to do math and predict how these things will work out 👍
@peuterschmidt11 ай бұрын
Just watched the latest Veritasium video on "The Prisoner's Dilema" and it goes well with this video.
@omeg54735 ай бұрын
0:16 *BUT WAIT..*
@juniotongol23922 ай бұрын
ITS JUST A THEORY
@oliverturner76102 ай бұрын
A MANGO THEORY
@Dacherry12 ай бұрын
*AND*-
@DerryMcdonagh-ts1pp2 ай бұрын
😫
@ryonotrio690411 ай бұрын
I completely forgot the existence of primer so when this video popped up on my feed, I was very pleasantly surprised
@SolarDelite11 ай бұрын
Evolution is awesome af
@feeb496611 ай бұрын
Hiiiiii
@SolarDelite11 ай бұрын
@@feeb4966 hiya :D
@boscoyuen89704 ай бұрын
Blue/dove:wow mango Red/hawk:GIMME THAT MANGO 0:03
@user-ts8ok4rk8b9 ай бұрын
*BUT HEY, THAT'S JUST A THEORY, A **0:16*
@kiti_cat5244 ай бұрын
Now this is underrated :)
@Ilikedoorsidk4 ай бұрын
Ñeow
@mrdoor1232311 ай бұрын
I think its funnier when the blobs are fighting for survival then live in modern houses rather than a rock
@Juanni11 ай бұрын
Hey! I love your videos. I just wanted to give some feedback, though. When you use only small sections of the whole screen, it’s difficult to see. I’d like it if you could zoom in more and then zoom out to show the wider scope. For example, during the section where you show the reward matrices, I would show the 3x3 grid, then when you’re explaining each one, make that situation fill out the whole screen, then zoom back out to show us where that situation fits on the grid. Another, less extreme example is at the start of the reward matrices chapter, where you change the reward matrix to have a weak nash against a Team blob and a strong nash against a Solo blob. you’re mostly using the top left quarter of the screen, with a bit of information in the top right, so the entire bottom half could be removed until we get to the part where we start making the 3x3 grid.
@MoeSzyslak2011 ай бұрын
Sounds like a skill issue
@--F0X-by-The-Moon--8 ай бұрын
So you are telling me this guy made a creature that Is legit a BLOB that lives ina ROCK and is able to simulate MATH?!??! I'M INNN
@MrGoo42011 ай бұрын
Could you run a simulation where each blob has some random percentage chance to share or solo when encountering a mango? It would be interesting to see what percentage chances reproduce the most.
@catec477311 ай бұрын
I'm so glad to see this video, my moods terrible and I needed a pick me up. Thank you Primer!
@SlimyBLOX10 ай бұрын
Can you simulate the evolution of revenge?
@The_Moth15 ай бұрын
I love how your profile picture is a happy blob’s face
@nokuh.789011 ай бұрын
The blobverse is truly something ❤
@tylerbuchanan268911 ай бұрын
I wish more people could see videos like this. I know many don't, but I thrive on basic theory like this. I do have my disagreements sometimes but they are variable based. Love your vids dude! Keep it going
@Hood_M3ruemАй бұрын
0:16 but hey that’s just a theory a
@justinoliverwiryadi7470Ай бұрын
GAME THEORY thanks for watching.
@justinoliverwiryadi7470Ай бұрын
Matpat thanks for everything
@newcbrosАй бұрын
bro died mid comment
@coleandclaire4675Күн бұрын
Blob theory!
@tachyonites956811 ай бұрын
You know it's an educational eon when Primer uploads
@terezi4real11 ай бұрын
how many times have you made this video?
@aarondelasy11 ай бұрын
Would be interesting on more real-world examples. When solo meets team BLOB who comes with friends so they can beat up the solo. It might seem obvious what will happen, but if you add one more variable SKILLS that will determine BLOB's ability to be lethal in a fight because they survived more and learned more and their parents gave them the DNA of a warrior. While team players will completely depend on the members of the team.
@MirrorscapeDC11 ай бұрын
I feel like there is a flaw in not allowing the blobs to respond to previous behavior. Most cooperating creatures are also social enough to know and remember others and build some form of relationship. So what would happen if all blob pairs played, say, three rounds? In the first, they act according to their nature. In the second and third, they are able to respond to what the other blob did before. So if the other blob betrayed them, they would act like a solo blob with them in following rounds.
@oldvlognewtricks11 ай бұрын
Effect is basically the same, since the aggregate population has the same pressure to change
@acctsys11 ай бұрын
Hawks get the first strike
@NE0KRATOS11 ай бұрын
I love your videos, whenever a new one pops up I watch it immediately! I love game theory, and I love these animations. And the fact that you explore all the questions that pop up in my head is so satisfying! I feel this is the channel I would create if I had the knowledge of how to make these simulations!
@Alinor2411 ай бұрын
There is a species of lizard with three different strategies and they are in the hawk/dove siatuation. The males have different mating strategies and if one strategy dominates a mating season the females prefer the males with the other two strategies. Along with their different startegies the males also have different colours though, so maybe the females just prefer the rarer colours. (If anyone wants to know the strategies are: monogamous, harem of females and sneakily mating with females from other males.)
@Kilomylesco11 ай бұрын
Been my main argument for humanism for years. Kindness and teamwork are evolutionary beneficial
@janetary11 ай бұрын
Introduce hierarchy and another type of cooperation: cronyism, nepotism, subjugation. Also a corollary graph that shows where resources go would be insightful. It's very possible that a single blob can get most of the mangoes and allocate their use among the others, whose survival strategy has to include its positions vis a vis the blob with most of the mangoes.
@ezfplayz6 ай бұрын
This is why i love computer science! There are many things u can do such as creating, modeling, coding, presenting, simulating, etc if u know what to do and what ur doing.
@Gaster-mm2sd10 ай бұрын
He says game theory, and that almost made me cry because mad pet quit today
@Snowy_bearsssАй бұрын
Nuh uh
@DylanSargesson11 ай бұрын
I love this channel. Already knew the "basic" Game Theory stuff from my Economics studies but seeing how it applies in the evolutionary context was really interesting.
@fraserwaters97711 ай бұрын
i love these videos so much because as an autistic person people can be hard. I usually struggle to know what to do in social situations and events, but all these videos help me kinda understand how other people think and how i can know what to do and when to do it. Thank you for just being great
@Paint7511 ай бұрын
Do not use this as a guide to how people think in social interactions, we are not animals
@stefanoscintilla522511 ай бұрын
Yes we are@@Paint75
@erylkenner804511 ай бұрын
@@Paint75 By definition, though, we are. The main difference between these examples and real-world social interactions is that knowing if something is a nash equilibrium in a social situation can be hard to tell because it depends on many many variables (personality of other person/people, the setting, time, history, etc. So in theory this video describes social decision outcomes perfectly, in practice this isn't that useful for it.
@Paint7511 ай бұрын
@@erylkenner8045 by definition yes we are animals, what i meant is we dont ACT like animals, people do not act like the blobs in this video, wild animals do. Don’t pretend like youre smarter than you are
@brasilballs11 ай бұрын
please dont hog all the mangoes for yourself
@snippykeegan11 ай бұрын
I just love game theory and i love how you simplify the math with the simulations! i would love to learn how to do such a thing myself so i can play with the variables
@xaviersavard634311 ай бұрын
One day I'd like to see predator blobs and prey blobs. It would be interesting. Have a good day
@robertalexander-bk5zj11 ай бұрын
Always exciting to see new content. The explanations and graphics really help to see the big picture.
@Aazdremzul11 ай бұрын
I think an interesting idea for this entire thing would be if each side had a mutation that could convince the opposing side. Teamwork can have the Diplomat (Purple), where if it encounters a Red it has a chance to convert it before getting fruits (3/4). Solo can have the Deviant (Orange), where if it encounters a Blue it has a chance to convert it after getting fruits (3/4). If the Diplomat meets a Deviant, they each have a (2/4) to convert the other to a blue or red respectively. A Diplomat and Deviant can only be born from a Blue or Red respectively with at least 5/4 fruit. This would be a way for each to propogate in a social way, because now they have a chance to effectively reproduce without needing to return home for offsprings. It'd show how upbringing and experience can propagate in an environment. The Diplomat represents a person that learned from the previous generation and the Deviant represents a person that continues teaching negative experiences.
@kayodesalandy11 ай бұрын
Technically that should end the very need of the game. Because what makes GT simulations of this kind interesting/relevant is that the 2 sides are unable to coordinate. Like the prisoners dilemma is only a dilemma because you don't know what your opponent is going to play. So assuming teamwork is objectively favourable, and the players are able to learn this, then the problem dissolves.
@Aazdremzul11 ай бұрын
@kayodesalandy That's fair, but I think the interactions and social elements in learning are really interesting to simulate. However, that's probably because I'm on a different wavelength here.
@kayodesalandy11 ай бұрын
@Aazdremzul oh I definitely agree! Like the more I think about it, what if we simulated it for a situation where selfishness was actually objectively better for the individual, but the diplomat can convince them otherwise? Of course the game gets exponentially more complicated because we need to simulate how selfish blobs interact with that proposition (endogenously determined by some factor/variable) to show that they are influenced by their physical environment. Funnily enough I'm not mathematically inclined, but game theory puzzles as word-logic games still appeal to me.
@Aazdremzul11 ай бұрын
@kayodesalandy I'm more interested in socio-economics and psychology personally, but I have a deep admiration for design in all facets. I think it's really interesting how math and probability really finds use in both fun concepts like games and insightful ideas used in psychology.
@blacklistnr111 ай бұрын
@9:19 I'm taking a pause to mention that I find your tables really confusing. Particularly: * things like 1 3/4 and 1 1/2 like in the beginning * this X/4 at the current time * the "vs Team" and "vs Solo" column names * lack of color & structure What I'd suggest doing: * keep the color coding from the video: - left column is blob 1: (blue dot) Team (red dot) Solo - top row is blob 2: (blue dot) Team (red dot) Solo, no "vs" * nuke "Reward Matrix", that is useless confusing math jargon. I want to know who, what and how much reward gets. Say "Energy per blob", or at least "Reward/blob" or per blob team * drop the mixed fractions, they are useless and confusing. - Either use a common multiple(e.g. multiply everything by 4) - or use a decimal 1.75 so I don't have to check are they the same numerator, what's the whole, which one is bigger, etc. * floating text looks so unstructured like some random numbers, - either go full matrix with some big square brackets - or a table with actual row/column lines, extra bonus for color coding the row background by blob color May your tables find nash equilibrium.
@fgomez20911 ай бұрын
I miss two things that are important in natural environments: (1) An area of team blobs will produce more abundant descendants, and they would migrate and take over areas of solo blobs (2) Two team blobs would look together for a tree and that would be the deciding factor. You tend to overlook the benefits of cooperating.
@defenestrated2311 ай бұрын
This isn't a natural environment, it's a toy model to demonstrate evolutionary game theory
@frostrix201111 ай бұрын
HES BACK AFTER 5 MONTHS LETS GOOOOOO
@RaiderAvian11 ай бұрын
If I were a blob in this wimulated world. I'd offer to shake the tree, knowing the reward for both is better when doing teamwork (2 mangos each). If I see the blob chooses to not help and grab a mango, I'd grab my own and run (you can say the energy spent is similar to fighting, but wil less risk of getting hurt), which I would have liked to be factored in. Because, acting violent can lead to shorter life spans (which could mean in this case a blob does not make through the day and reproduce). Then again, the real world is vastly complex and has a long history where people lived, died, fought, made peace, and threatened to destroy the world as we know it. I am admittedly biased for team/dove blobs. I wish to see a world where people work together. They dont have to like each other, but they have to learn to work with others when living in a populated world.
@arindano11 ай бұрын
I’m so happy we have another video of the blobs, I always put the videos wile im trying to sleep (I have insomnia and primer’s voice is like relaxing for me)
@user-ix9zt2ls9f10 ай бұрын
It’s just a theory a game theory
@electrocubic511610 ай бұрын
0:16 The moment I saw it, I knew there will be comments like these 😅 5:23 He also purposefully referenced Matpat 😂 I will miss Matpat tho :'(
@ozAqVvhhNue11 ай бұрын
One tiny criticism: When you show the fractions on top of another like in 7:04 then it's easier to read if they are a bit more spaced (at least for me). Otherwise this is a great video :)
@Maxtheeggman5 ай бұрын
Okay now simulate racism
@ChingChong029465 ай бұрын
I vote *yes*
@Cider85 ай бұрын
Yessir
@LeoSinha-r6j5 ай бұрын
I think it was techincally done with the green beard video
@Kalaphant4 ай бұрын
Just make it so that 10% of the blobs always fight 90% of them!
@Greeen3Boi74 ай бұрын
Nah bro💀💀💀💀
@c0pykatt11 ай бұрын
another great vid~ it's always facinating to see the stats
@MackenzieBailey-q5j11 ай бұрын
People that have been waiting one year for a new primer video 👇
@hugocastaenda438711 ай бұрын
YOU'RE BACK!!
@Sonnell11 ай бұрын
While I like this channel and the intentions, I strongly disagree that this is a simulation of something real. This has so many assumptions and made up variables, that just simply can not be counted as any analogy of reality. This is just a game with some made up rules.
@snazysanz247910 ай бұрын
I disagree but respect your opinion
@Sonnell10 ай бұрын
@@snazysanz2479 Cool!
@Chayanta7 ай бұрын
i bet you are a conservative/support capitalism
@Sonnell7 ай бұрын
@@Chayanta :D and what are your arguments for this assumption? :)
@oghene27787 ай бұрын
Wtf does this have to do with anything@@Chayanta
@thomasbelcher692111 ай бұрын
13:34 Pretty sure the solo blobs actually do have a tiny advantage because every time one meets another blob, that blob gets one less mango. This means it gets rid of its competition so it can carve out more of a niche for itself.
@sharifkhudairi536811 ай бұрын
thats true, but it doesn't take into account that when 2 team blobs meet, both reproduce at a higher rate. So team vs solo, solo produces at a higher rate at the expense of team, but when its team vs team, both team reproduce at a higher rate (while only one solo benefits in the previous exchange).
@Dogo.R11 ай бұрын
The important missing thing here is memory of the previous interaction with that blob. The optimal strategy when memory of previous interactions is involved is known as the tit for tat strategy. Tit for tat definition: The best strategy is to assume cooperation at first. Then if they act one-sided in that interaction then in your next interact you strive to exactly* negate the extra benefit they received from acting one-sided instead of cooperatively. Then in the next interaction you assume cooperation again. This strategy performs better then all other strategies invented as long as you can keep track of who you have interacted with previously and whether they acted cooperatively or one-sided that last time. And this same strategy can be observed in nature... though animals arnt dynamic like humans. They cant really switch strategy within the same livespan. Their behavior is formed due to evolution instead. Also worth mentioning that the above is based on perfect information. The optimal strategy has many more features and complexities when there is imperfect information but it still follows this core aim. The extra stuff is just trying to deal with signal error.
@penguinchess11 ай бұрын
I'm more invested in these blobs than I am in my own life...
@ShifTide11 ай бұрын
you know it's a good decade when Primer posts
@luckydog851411 ай бұрын
1:54 "wander around till they die" same
@Maker082411 ай бұрын
I like how many times you've made a video on this same topic. This must be your favorite topic
@GypsyCellist11 ай бұрын
Hi Man U are rhit
@GypsyCellist11 ай бұрын
Hi
@GypsyCellist11 ай бұрын
Same I agree 0:54
@cheeselord815311 ай бұрын
The days that you upload are some of the best of the year